President Nayib Bukele's government claims the move will
give many Salvadorans access to bank services for the first time and save some
$400 million in fees on remittances sent home from abroad every year.
"Tomorrow, for the first time in history, all the eyes
of the world will be on El Salvador. #Bitcoin did this," Bukele said on
Twitter Monday. Bitcoin price in India stood at Rs. 40.64 lakhs as of 9:30am
IST on September 7.
He started the ball rolling Monday evening by announcing El
Salvador had bought its first 400 Bitcoins, in two tranches of 200, and
promised more were coming.
The 400 Bitcoins were trading at around $21 million,
according to the cryptocurrency exchange app Gemini.
Recent opinion polls showed a majority of El Salvador's 6.5
million people reject the idea and will continue using the US dollar, the
country's legal currency for the last 20 years.
"This Bitcoin is a currency that does not exist, a
currency that will not benefit the poor but the rich," said skeptic Jose
Santos Melara, who took part in a protest by several hundred people in the
capital San Salvador last week.
"How will a poor person invest (in Bitcoin) if they
barely have enough to eat?"
In June, El Salvador's parliament approved a law to allow
the crypto money to be accepted as tender for all goods and services in the
small Central American nation, along with the US dollar.
The bill, an initiative of Bukele, was approved within 24
hours of being presented to Congress - where the president's allies have held a
majority since March.
Experts and regulators have highlighted concerns about the
cryptocurrency's notorious volatility and the lack of any protections for its
users.
Skepticism
The government is installing more than 200 Bitcoin teller
machines, some guarded by soldiers to prevent possible arson by opponents.
And Bukele has promised $30 for each citizen who adopts the
currency.
"These are decisions the administration and lawmakers
have taken without consulting" the population, said Laura Andrade,
director of the Public Opinion Institute of the Central American University,
which found in a poll that 70 percent of Salvadorans opposed the move.
"We see that people do not perceive a positive impact
to significantly transform their living conditions," she told AFP.
Nearly two-thirds of Salvadorans questioned for the poll said
they had no interest in downloading the Chivo electronic wallet that will allow
users to buy and spend Bitcoin.
Oscar Cabrera, an economist at the University of El
Salvador, said the currency's high volatility will have a "negative
impact" on consumers, affecting the price of goods and services.
The currency fell beneath $30,000 in June, less than half
its all-time high of more than $64,000 (roughly Rs. 46.7 lakhs) just two months
earlier.
For its part, the Salvadoran Foundation for Economic and
Social Development (FUSADE) said it was "unconstitutional" to make it
compulsory for merchants to accept Bitcoin as a form of payment.
'Malign actors'
Bukele, who is popular but under fire in several quarters
for moves to tighten his grip on power, has accused opponents of seeking to
"sow fear" among Salvadorans, few of whom have access to formal
banking services.
Remittances account for more than a fifth of GDP in the
dollarised economy, mainly sent in dollars via agencies such as Western Union
by an estimated 1.5 million expats.
According to World Bank data, El Salvador received more than
$5.9 billion in 2020 from nationals living abroad, mainly in the United States.
And the country is relying on this money to boost a
struggling economy that contracted 7.9 percent in 2020 due in large part to the
coronavirus pandemic.
Economists and international bodies such as the World Bank,
International Monetary Fund and Inter-American Development Bank have expressed
concerns about El Salvador's Bitcoin adoption.
The United States has urged El Salvador to ensure a
"regulated," "transparent," and "responsible" use
of Bitcoin, and to protect itself from "malign actors" such as
hackers seeking ransom money.
Bitcoin is criticised by regulators for its potential for
illegal use - notably in laundering money from criminal activities and
financing terrorism.
But not everyone is against it, and according to Bukele in
late June, some 50,000 Salvadorans were using Bitcoin.
Many of them are in the coastal town of El Zonte, where
hundreds of businesses and individuals use the currency for everything from paying
utilities bills to buying a can of soda.
Started as a project by an anonymous Bitcoin donor, the town
until recently boasted El Salvador's only Bitcoin teller machine.
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